Stabroek News

Trinidad PM weighs Mexico request to join US anti-gun lawsuit

- (Trinidad Guardian)

Mexico has asked Caricom to join its legal fight to hold US gun manufactur­ers and distributo­rs responsibl­e for the crime mayhem their weapons of destructio­n have been used to unleash in some countries - and T&T is actively considerin­g the request.

Prime Minister Dr Keith Rowley indicated this on Thursday night at the People's National Movement's public meeting at Barataria Community Centre. It was the PNM’s first public meeting for 2023.

On Mexico’s request, Rowley said, “T&T is actively considerin­g that to test the legality of those who make those weapons of war that are destroying our societies – we have to join that fight.”

Rowley said he suspects the proposed legal battle, which will be undertaken in the US courts, is one of the things that will come out of the Caricom Crime Symposium that will be held here in T&T from April 16-17. He noted that he is responsibl­e for national security in the Caricom quasi-Cabinet format.

“If you ask me what I want out of this conference, over and above educating our population, I want Caricom to speak as one voice to our major trading partner – our friend in the north, with one voice to say to them: America must do more to prevent guns from coming from America into our country!”

He said the Mexican government had already undertaken a similar legal fight before and lost in the US court but is prepared to keep it up, but with other sovereign nations affected by the gun scourge, hence the request to Caricom.

Rowley also recognised the Director of Public Prosecutio­ns’ recent complaints of things not going well and lack of staffing. He said Government had found executive offices for the Director of Public Prosecutio­ns division, but after three years there has not been a “footstep inside the office.. and we’re paying millions of dollars in rent…”

“I don’t want to use the words I want to use

because that would be telling you too much – but you come and telling me an executive office for a bank is not good for the DPP Office?”

He said there was a three-year contract for this, "paying millions…between the DPP office and TTPS Special Branch … something… went on there.”

“They want bullet-proof glass. Months passing, we put bullet-proof glass in the building…(then) they want a wall… a wall outside the bullet-proof glass… when it reach to the point the landlord say ‘Don’t interfere anymore with my building’.”

He said while it was easy to blame the Government, the latter was simply a series of strands in a fabric and the Cabinet was simply the weaver.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Guyana